(This review was originally written for and posted at the Chicago Center for Literature and Photography's site. My own funds supplied this book.)
The Goldfinch, Donna Tartt
Read: 26 October to 22 December 2013
5 / 5 stars
The story that is the backbone of Donna Tartt's third novel, The Goldfinch,
is one I keep seeing compared rather favorably, if not with a bit of
reductive simplicity, to Dickens: An adolescent Theo Decker loses his
mother in a museum explosion, leaving him first emotionally orphaned and
later legally unmoored when his ne'er-do-well father meets a graciously
early end (which is the only death in this book that brought me
physical relief), eventually driving him to seek refuge with the
avuncular Hobie, an antiques dealer to whom Theo was fatefully led in
the aftermath of his mother's death. Theo carries around the untreated
damage of his mother's death for as long as The Goldfinch follows
him---into the early years of his adulthood---and presumably well
beyond that to the point where he refers to his PTSD and its array of
triggers with a familiarity usually reserved for an appendage. This
gaping, fiercely protected wound draws him into some less than savory
proclivities, like a nasty drug habit and selling Hobie's lovingly
refurbished antiques as extant relics from earlier times, unbeknownst to
the guardian who's more of a father figure than he's ever known in the
only way he knows how to rescue the older man from financial ruin, but
also renders Theo so bravely honest and sympathetically magnetic that
it's easy to forgive his lesser qualities, especially since many of his
shortcomings are born of a marriage between good intentions and limited
options.
In fact, among the myriad lessons this book explores regarding the
dualities of human nature and life itself, the fact that goodness
doesn't always come from goodness and that bad doesn't always beget bad
is one of its most fervently emphasized--and it should come as no
surprise that a novel so devoted to art should be so keen on the notion
that the world is painted in much more than just blacks and whites. The Goldfinch
borrows its title from the Carel Fabritius painting of the same name
(the artist, it should be noted, also died in an explosion), a favorite
painting of his mother's that Theo "rescues" from the museum during his
dazed, frantic efforts to escape, a theft that was really executed as a
testament to the hope that his mother would soon return home to both her son
and the painting he liberated for her delight alone. It is the painting
that propels Theo toward a life of covert misdeeds but it is also a
tangible connection to the mother whose death threw the trajectory of
his future regrettably off course. Theo himself is proof that something
good can come from less than well-intentioned origins, as his own father
lacks the integrity and heart Theo inherited from his mother. Far from
harboring delusions about himself, Theo is his own worst critic, which
only renders him all the more likable.
Theo is the bruised, beating heart of this novel and the supporting
cast does lend vibrant splashes of color and gorgeous harmonies
throughout the composition, but the cities Theo finds himself
ping-ponging across are just as alive as any corporeal character. The
New York City Theo considers his lifelong home and the one he returns to
after years of Las Vegas life reflect the city's tireless mutability as
well as Theo's own internal metamorphosis. If NYC acts almost as its
own foil, then the thin, flashy veneer and always encroaching desert of
Vegas offers a glimpse into downright alien territory, a life of
premature adulthood's self-reliance and prolonged childhood's tendency
toward bad life choices under the uninterested watch of his
self-absorbed father that contrasts darkly but critically against with
the two-against-the-world safety and warmth his mother offered. The
unceremonious and abrupt shift to Amsterdam robs the city of some of its
old-world, foreign charm in Theo's alternately confused, feverish and
despairing states during his relatively short but transformative stay,
but Tartt still subtly weaves its essence into Theo's distracted
narration. The full effect allows the unique spirits of the three cities
to spring off each page with a palpable dimensionality that is wholly
immersive. It is impossible to not see each dark street, feel each slap
of icy wind and tiny drop of sweat, conjure each richly but
unobtrusively detailed scene down to the draping of a tablecloth.
The painstaking research that went into this book--foreign languages,
art, literature, antiques restoration, far-flung locales, capturing
low-brow banter and high-class empty chatter with equally convincing
success--is as impressive as Tartt's enviable command of storytelling
and word-slinging. Each detail is as necessary as it is beautifully
finessed, the mark of a gifted writer who knows exactly what to
highlight for maximum impact rather than an amateur's scattershot load
of tacked-on trivialities to hold up a story that carries no emotional
weight.
A work that champions the restorative power of art, how one thing can
be so beautiful in so many ways that it indiscriminately sings out to
scores across the barriers of time and geography and culture to unite an
audience that can't begin to know the exhaustive scope of its reach,
ought to be an appropriately transformative work itself. Celebrating a
masterful talent that echoes across otherwise impregnable distances
because it is so rarely seen again rings trite if the tribute isn't
equal to the task. The Goldfinch hits all the high notes,
captures a complicated spirit in the warmest and richest of tones, and
deploys an impressive literary arsenal all to such resounding success
that it is, without a scrap of doubt, my only logical choice for Best
Book of 2013. What else do you call a book that spans nearly 800 pages
and still feels too short? That it takes a commanding self-control to
write about without using five exclamation points after every
caps-locked sentence? That brings with its last page the heartache of
saying goodbye to an old friend?
This book is so powerful, so beautifully written that I don't quite know how to describe it. An incredible story, it really will leave you wanting more of Ms Tartt's writing. Don't pass up this book. It is simply amazing.
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